Use “right on cue” for perfect timing; use “right on queue” for a literal line or ordered list.
Both spellings show up online, in texts, and even in school work. The trouble is simple: cue and queue sound the same, so your ear can’t guide your fingers.
Once you tie each word to its meaning, the choice gets easy. Cue points to a signal. Queue points to a line. The rest is just checking what your sentence is doing. Once you spot the meaning, your spelling choice stops feeling like a toss.
Right On Cue Or Right On Queue In Real Writing
“Right on cue” is the standard idiom for something that happens at the exact moment you expect. It often carries a small wink, like you’re saying, “Of course it happened right then.”
“Right on queue” can be correct when you’re talking about an actual queue: people waiting, tasks waiting, songs waiting, files waiting. If you use it for timing, many readers will see it as a spelling slip.
| Word Or Phrase | What It Means | Where You’ll See It |
|---|---|---|
| cue (noun) | A signal that tells someone to act | Theater, music, routines |
| cue (verb) | To signal an action | “Cue the music,” “Cue the lights” |
| queue (noun) | A line of people or things waiting | Stores, ticketing, apps |
| queue (verb) | To place in a line or list | Playlists, print jobs, uploads |
| right on cue | At the exact expected moment | Timing, storytelling |
| right on queue | Exactly in line or in the right order | Queues, ordered lists |
| on cue | At the right moment, as signaled | Performing arts, plans |
| in the queue | Waiting in a line or list | Customer service, software |
| queue up | Form a line or line items up | People, songs, files |
What “Cue” Means
Cue is a signal. In a play, an actor waits for a line that signals their entrance. In a meeting, a raised hand can cue a pause. In daily life, a ringtone can cue you to answer your phone.
Because it’s tied to timing and action, cue pairs well with verbs like “take,” “give,” “miss,” and “wait for.” It also appears in set phrases like “on cue” and “right on cue.”
Cue As A Noun
As a noun, a cue is the thing that triggers the action.
- That nod was my cue to start talking.
- She waited for the cue before stepping onto the stage.
- The timer beeped, and that was his cue to flip the pancakes.
Cue As A Verb
As a verb, cue means you signal something to begin.
- Cue the music at the chorus.
- The director cued the lights to fade.
- His comment cued laughter from the crowd.
What “Queue” Means
Queue is a line or an ordered list. It can be physical, like people waiting to buy tickets. It can be digital, like tasks waiting to run, emails waiting to send, or songs waiting to play.
If you can swap the word with “line” or “waiting list,” queue is the right pick.
Queue In Daily Life
In British English, queue is common in daily writing. In American English, “line” is more common in speech, yet queue still shows up in signs, travel writing, and ticketing.
- We stood in a queue outside the cinema.
- Your order is in the queue for packing.
- I queued the documents for printing.
Queue In Tech Writing
Software uses queues constantly: playlists, print spools, background jobs, message handling. If you want a quick definition check, Merriam-Webster’s entries for cue and queue show the split in plain language.
Why The Mixup Happens
First, the sound: cue and queue are homophones in most accents. Second, the spelling: queue looks long, so it can feel “more formal” even when it’s wrong. Third, autocorrect: once your phone learns one spelling, it may keep suggesting it.
Fast Rule: Timing Uses Cue, Lines Use Queue
Ask what your sentence is describing. If it’s timing, use cue. If it’s a line or list, use queue. These two quick checks handle almost all cases.
Check A: Swap In “Signal”
If “signal” fits the meaning, cue fits the spelling.
- Right on cue, the lights went out. (Right on signal matches the idea.)
- I missed my cue and spoke too early. (Missed my signal matches.)
Check B: Swap In “Line”
If “line” fits the meaning, queue fits the spelling.
- There’s a queue at the door. (There’s a line at the door.)
- The songs are in the queue. (The songs are in the line, meaning an ordered list.)
How To Use “Right On Cue”
“Right on cue” describes something that happens at the exact expected moment. It can be neutral, funny, or mildly annoyed. Your tone comes from the rest of the sentence.
Reliable Sentence Shapes
- Right on cue, + event: “Right on cue, the phone rang.”
- event + right on cue: “The fireworks started right on cue.”
- clause + right on cue + clause: “I sat down and, right on cue, the meeting began.”
Short Sentence Models
- Right on cue, my neighbor began drilling the wall.
- The baby woke up right on cue, five minutes into the movie.
- Right on cue, the cat hopped onto the screen.
- The speaker paused, and the applause came right on cue.
Cue And Queue In Common Phrases
Writers don’t just trip on “right on cue.” They also mix up other set phrases, since both words sound like “Q.” The cure is the same: check whether the phrase points to timing or to a list.
Phrases That Pair With Cue
These are about signals and timing. If you can picture someone waiting for a sign, cue is the right spelling.
- on cue: at the right moment, as signaled
- cue someone in: bring someone into a plan or topic
- cue the music: signal music to start
- cue the lights: signal a lighting change
Phrases That Pair With Queue
These are about ordering and waiting. If you can picture a line or a list, queue is the right spelling.
- in the queue: waiting in the list
- queue up: form a line or line items up
- next in the queue: next to be processed
- queue the song: place it in the play order
Quick Rewrite Moves When You’re Unsure
If cue and queue both feel odd, your sentence may be vague. A small rewrite can lock in the meaning.
- Swap “right on cue” with “exactly on time” when you want a neutral tone.
- Swap “right on queue” with “next in line” when you want zero tech wording.
- Add a clarifying noun: “checkout queue,” “playlist queue,” “processing queue.”
- Move the phrase to the front: “Right on cue, …” It often reads cleaner.
When “Right On Queue” Works
“Right on queue” works when you mean “in the correct place in line” or “set up in the correct order.” It reads best when your sentence points clearly to a queue, not to timing.
Clear Uses
- Your request is right on queue and will run after the current job.
- The print order is right on queue, behind two reports.
- Those songs are right on queue for the drive home.
When your sentence is about timing, switch to cue. If you want zero confusion, you can also rewrite: “next in the queue,” “in the processing queue,” or “in the playlist queue.”
Memory Hooks That Don’t Feel Like Homework
Pick one hook and stick with it. The best memory tool is the one you’ll use when you’re tired.
Cue: Short Word, Quick Signal
Cue is short. A cue is quick. That pairing is easy to recall mid-sentence.
Queue: Extra Letters In A Line
Queue has extra letters that look like they’re waiting behind the first one. That matches a line of people or items.
Using These Phrases In School And Work
In narratives and personal essays, “right on cue” adds voice without slang. In strict academic prose, you may prefer “exactly on time” or “as scheduled” if your instructor expects a plain tone.
In work email, “right on cue” can sound playful. It can also read as sarcasm in a tense thread. If you don’t want that edge, choose “as planned” or “as scheduled.”
“Right on queue” is fine in technical notes about processing order. In general email, it can confuse readers unless you’ve already been talking about a line, a playlist, or a task list.
Practice Set: Choose Cue Or Queue
Read each sentence, name the meaning, then pick the spelling.
| Sentence | Correct Word | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| The thunder started ____ as we stepped outside. | cue | Timing. |
| Your ticket is in the ____ at the front desk. | queue | Line or list. |
| Right on ____, the projector stopped working. | cue | Expected timing. |
| The next three videos are in the ____. | queue | Ordered list. |
| That text was my ____ to leave. | cue | Signal to act. |
| Please ____ the files for upload. | queue | Place items in order. |
| On my ____, I walked to the mic. | cue | Performance timing. |
| We joined the ____ near the entrance. | queue | Physical line. |
One-Minute Edit Checklist
- Find each “cue” and “queue” in your draft.
- Try “signal.” If it fits, use cue.
- Try “line.” If it fits, use queue.
- If neither fits cleanly, rewrite the sentence to sharpen the meaning.
- If you wrote “right on queue” and meant timing, swap to “right on cue.”
Common Traps And Clean Fixes
Trap: “Standing In A Cue”
People stand in a queue or in a line. People wait for a cue. If you see “standing in a cue,” it’s almost always the wrong word.
Trap: Queue Used For Timing
If your sentence is about a moment arriving, use cue. If your sentence is about order, use queue. When the meaning is mixed, add a clarifying noun: “processing queue,” “checkout queue,” or “playlist queue.”
Trap: Cue Used For A Digital List
If you mean items waiting in an app, it’s a queue. Many platforms also use the verb form: “queue the next song,” “queue the files,” “queue the message.”
Last Line Rule You Can Trust
When you write right on cue or right on queue, decide what you mean first. Signal equals cue. Line equals queue. Then your spelling matches your meaning each time.
One more time in plain words: if it’s timing, it’s right on cue or right on queue with cue, not queue.